2018-05-21
1 小时 6 分钟So when Sadie Lincoln was growing up as a little kid, she was kind of raised by her mom and a group of counterculture friends, all women with kids who brought them up as sort of a collective family.
And they eventually moved from New Mexico to Eugene, Oregon, and stayed this kind of really beautiful family.
Eventually, as most kids do, she started to rebel against this and went about as mainstream as she could.
But the lessons from that time in her life just keep resurfacing over and over, reflecting on doing inner work, reflecting on the importance of family, of movement, of relationships.
This just kept coming back.
Sadie eventually went to college and found her way into the fitness world, where she became a member of a team that grew this legendary global fitness brand called 24 hours fitness.
But something wasn't right.
And after about eleven years or so, she realized she needed something else personally and she wanted to create something else that was very different and served a different need in that market.
She took some time with her husband Chris, and then married and a mom of two kids, they decided to team up to launch something called Bar Three with a first location in Portland, Oregon.
One of my favorite places that has rapidly exploded into a global brand of its own, with more than 100 studios.
Empowering people to reconnect with their own intuition, with movement, empowering the franchise owners to really also step up and have something they can claim ownership of and create in their own form and shape and customize and bring their soul, their voice to the world.
We explore this really moving journey in today's conversation and also kind of circle around to her current deep focus and interest in discovering voice, especially for women.
And her work around that and how she has learned so much and is bringing so much of this wisdom to the people in her company and then sort of rippling out to all the many people that those folks then affect with their daily teachings.
Really excited to share her journey and story with you.
I'm Jonathan Fields and this is good life project.
Let's kind of take a step back in time.
You have shared, I know, a number of different ways and places.
You grew up in a pretty non traditional, sort of like approach to family.
Yeah, it's my normal, but in retrospect, I suppose it's, yeah, unconventional.
My mother, in her early twenties, was part of the counterculture.